Current:Home > reviewsParents sue school district following wristband protest against transgender girl at soccer game -Blueprint Money Mastery
Parents sue school district following wristband protest against transgender girl at soccer game
Poinbank View
Date:2025-04-06 19:01:11
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Three parents and a grandparent have sued a New Hampshire school district, saying their rights were violated when they were barred from school grounds for wearing pink wristbands with “XX,” representing the female chromosome pair, in protest of a transgender girl playing in a girls soccer game.
The lawsuit filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Concord followed a Sept. 17 match at Bow High School against Plymouth Regional High School. A 15-year-old transgender girl is playing on the Plymouth team as she and another teen challenge a New Hampshire ban in court.
Two of the parents whose daughters play for Bow wore the wristbands during the second half of the game to “silently express their opinion about the importance of reserving women’s sports for biological females,” according to their lawsuit filed by attorneys from the Institute for Free Speech.
The lawsuit said school officials and a local police officer confronted the parents during the game, telling them to remove the wristbands or leave. The plaintiffs refused, citing their First Amendment rights, then said they were threatened with arrest for trespassing.
At one point, the referee stopped the game and said that Bow High School would forfeit if the plaintiffs did not remove their wristbands, the lawsuit said. The wristbands were removed and the game resumed.
Following the game, the two parents received “No Trespass Orders” banning them from school grounds and events, the lawsuit said. One was banned for a week, the other for the fall term.
“Parents don’t shed their First Amendment rights at the entrance to a school’s soccer field. We wore pink wristbands to silently support our daughters and their right to fair competition,” Kyle Fellers, one of the plaintiffs who said he received a no-trespass order, said in a statement. “Instead of fostering open dialogue, school officials responded with threats and bans that have a direct impact on our lives and our children’s lives.”
The lawsuit says it seeks to prevent what it describes as the unconstitutional application of several school policies, including those requiring “mutual respect, civility, and orderly conduct” and prohibiting actions that “injure, threaten, harass, or intimidate” or “impede, delay, disrupt, or otherwise interfere with any school activity or function.”
In addition to the school district, the lawsuit names as defendants district Superintendent Marcy Kelley, Bow High School Principal Matt Fisk, school athletic director Michael Desilets, as well as the police officer and referee.
“At this time, we have no comment,” Kelley said in an email Tuesday when asked if she, other members of the school district, or an attorney representing them, wanted to respond to the lawsuit. Emails sent to the police officer and to the organization representing the referee were not immediately answered.
An email seeking comment from the attorney representing the transgender athlete also was not immediately returned.
Bow School Board chairperson Bryce Larrabee mentioned the lawsuit at a meeting Monday night and said the board would not be commenting on it. Kelley, who attended the meeting, also did not comment on the lawsuit.
Audience members spoke in favor and against the protesters during the public comment period.
“You just silenced someone who had a different opinion,” one man said.
Criticizing those who wore the pink wristbands during the game, the parent of a player on the Bow team said, “This is not the right way to go about doing things.”
veryGood! (5874)
Related
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- This dinosaur last walked the earth 150 million years ago. Scientists unearthed it in Thailand.
- Animal sedative 'tranq' worsening overdose crisis as it spreads across the country
- Shedeur Sanders speaks on Colorado Buffaloes meshing, family ties at local youth event
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Whoopi Goldberg Defends Barbie Movie From Critics of Greta Gerwig Film
- Home Sweet Parking Lot: Some hospitals welcome RV living for patients, families and workers
- WNBA’s Riquna Williams arrested on felony domestic violence charges in Las Vegas
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Medicaid expansion in North Carolina will begin Oct. 1, if lawmakers can enact a budget
Ranking
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- How Alex Morgan grew from USWNT rising star to powerful advocate and disruptor
- When does 'Hard Knocks' start? 2023 premiere date, team, what to know before first episode
- Body found on grounds of Arizona State Capitol
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- S Club 7 Recalls the Awful Moment They Learned of Paul Cattermole's Death
- This weather-related reason is why more people are dying at national parks
- Naked woman gets out of car at major Bay Area bridge and starts firing gun, authorities say
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Prosecutors want disgraced crypto mogul Bankman-Fried in jail ahead of trial
TikTokers are zapping their skin with red light; dermatologists say they’re onto something
S Club 7 Recalls the Awful Moment They Learned of Paul Cattermole's Death
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
North Carolina cancels incentives deal with Allstate for not attracting enough jobs in Charlotte
iPhone helps California responders find man who drove off 400-foot cliff, ejected from car
Trump could still be elected president despite 2nd indictment, experts say